Letter from Franklin Benjamin Sanborn to W. T. Harris
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Letter from Franklin Benjamin Sanborn to W. T. Harris
- Publication date
- 1901-08-12
- Collection
- abernethycollection; middleburycollege; americana
- Language
- english-handwritten
This is a scanned version of the original document in the Abernethy Manuscripts Collection at Middlebury College.
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- Addeddate
- 2016-02-12 15:37:35
- Identifier
- aberms.sanbornfb.1901.08.12.2
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t23c06f3t
- Language-statement
- Our collections and catalog records may contain offensive or harmful language and content that may be difficult to view. To learn more, read our statement on language in archival and library catalogs.
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.7
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.13
- Rights
- For questions or information about duplication, licensing, or copyright status for this item, please contact Special Collections, Middlebury College Library at specialcollections@middlebury.edu
- Scanner
- Internet Archive Python library 0.9.8
- Transcription
Concord, Mass., August 12, 1901. Dear Wilder; Since I wrote you my little Emerson volume has come out; and I have indited a still smaller one for C. A. Goodspeed, who published Whittier's letters to Elizur Wright, to issue in a small, costly edition, with fac-similes and a picture or two, - 'The Personality of Thoreau'. John Albee, whom I think you used to know, and who is now slowly dying of angina pectoris at his mountain home on Chocorua, N.H. has sent me a letter about it, which I copied for Dr. Harris, and will send you also a copy. It states the fact about Thoreau and Emerson very well; though I do not put Sir. T. B. so high as Albee would. In his last illness, Thoreau rather surprised me by saying that he thought Emerson would stand, a century or two hence, much as Brown now does; and this I have cited in the booklet. I hear nothing of late from Connelley, - partly because I have not written to him, I suppose. I found that his John Brown has slightly stimulated the sale of mine, - the July account showed that. I hope his sells also, as it ought. I have sent the Harvard Graduates Mag. a screed about E. A. Sophocles, to accompany Flint's (1856) caricature of him, which will be re-engraved there. I trust you are well, as we are, - and all yours. Faithfully, F. B. Sanborn D. W. Wilder Hiawatha I hope your part of Kansas es- caped the scorching which has so damaged the "wall of corn". Here we have fair crops of our diminutive farming. I would not go to Commencement to hear Senator Hoar puff Mc- Kinley - but our class had a good dinner with Mitchell presiding. F. B. S.
- Year
- 1901
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